Robert Gligorov, ‘Art 4 oil’ (2006)
Found on new-art a while ago…
A few more works after the jump.
Eric Von Robertson, ‘All alone together’ (2010)
Initial research project around Duane Hanson’s realist figures.
Car Dealer – The watch on this sculpture has been dormant for years.
This project is essentially about replacing the batteries in these sculptures or inhabiting them in some way.
Eric Von Robertson is participating in WHAT’S THE POINT OF GIVING YOU ANY MORE ARTWORKS?, the very first exhibition curated by Pietmondriaan.com, opening tonight at KOP in Breda!
Olivier Maarschalk, ‘Memories from the future’
During a lonely stay in Finland, Maarschalk asked his mother, girlfriend and roommate to pick a date and time in the future, on which they expected him and themselves to still be alive. For each person he made a drawing that shows the exact curve in which the sun enters his studio on that specific time. The drawings were sent to each participant by post.
Olivier Maarschalk is participating in WHAT’S THE POINT OF GIVING YOU ANY MORE ARTISTS? which opens coming Friday at eight.
Wolfgang Plöger, detail from ‘Let’s give them what they want’ (12 b/w photographs) (2009)
Wolfgang Plöger will be taking part in WHAT’S THE POINT OF GIVING YOU ANY MORE ARTWORKS? @ KOP
Tris Vonna-Michell, ‘The trades of others’. Performance still (2008)
Vonna-Michell’s performances and installations function as chapters within a non-linear story, combining personal myth with historical traces.
Interview here
‘Sharing a beautiful sunset’ (2009) by Jasper Elings. Watch the video.
A video composed of images of sunsets, found by Google image search.
‘Me in front of‘, concept by Wolfgang Plöger (2004).
Wolfgang Plöger initiated a google image search with the words ‘me in front of‘. The results are hundreds of pictures of people standing in front of something that is important to them.
The Window of the World is a theme park located in Shenzhen in the People’s Republic of China. It has about 130 reproductions of some of the most famous tourist attractions in the world squeezed into 48 hectares.